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Bubbles! Why are they round? What makes them so colorful? Have fun blowing bubbles and trying cool experiments to learn how bubbles are made!
Surface Tension and Soap Find out how bubbles work with this experiment. You won't actually blow any bubbles, but you will learn the science that makes a bubble! What You Will Need:
What To Do:
What's Happening? Water is made up of lots of tiny molecules. The molecules are attracted to each other and stick together. The molecules on the very top of the water stick together very closely to make a force called surface tension. Surface tension is what caused the water to rise up above the rim of the glass in the experiment - the water molecules stuck together to make a dome instead of spilling over the side. Why didn't the dome break when you stuck your finger through it? Why didn't the water spill over the glass? Well, the surface tension was strong enough that it just went around your finger. The water molecules still stuck to each other and nothing spilled! What happened when you put your soapy finger into the water? The soap on your finger broke the water's surface tension and some of the water molecules didn't stick to each other any more and they were pushed out of the glass! The force of surface tension also creates bubbles. In plain water, the surface tension is strong and the water might make some bubbles, but they will not last very long and they will be very small, because the other molecules in the water will pull on the bubbles and flatten them. Soap needs to be mixed with the water to make bubbles that can float through the air. When you add soap, the water becomes flexible, sort of like elastic, and it can hold the shape of a bubble when air is blown into it. Super Bubble Solution Make your own bubble-blowing solution out of soap and water, then see what happens when you add a special ingredient to the bubble solution! What You Will Need:
What To Do:
What's Happening? The first bubble solution was just soap and water. As you learned from the Surface Tension experiment, soap helps bubbles form. You probably got some small bubbles that didn't last very long from the soap and water. Then you added glycerin or corn syrup to the soap and water and probably noticed that the bubbles you blew were stronger and better than before. Did they last longer? Were they bigger? The glycerin or corn syrup mixes with the soap to make it thicker. When the water that is trapped between the layers of soap in a bubble evaporates (or dries up), the bubble will pop! The thicker skin of the glycerin bubble keeps the water from evaporating as quickly. You can probably also blow a much bigger bubble with the second bubble solution that you made than with the plain soap and water one. Adding glycerin or corn syrup makes bubbles stronger and helps them last longer. It makes super bubbles! Bubble Tricks After you make the super bubble solution and let it set for at least one day, try doing some of these cool bubble tricks! Can you think of any of your own tricks to do with bubbles? What You Will Need:
How To Do The Tricks: Trick 1 - A Square Bubble? You will need two pipe cleaners and your super bubble solution for this trick.
What's Happening? The bubble was round even though it came from a square! Bubbles are always round when they detach and float through the air because the skin of soap always tries to take up the least amount of space it can and still keep the same amount of air inside the bubble. The soap molecules always stretch into a round shape automatically! A round shape takes up less space than a square shape. Try the trick again, but make a wand in any shape you want - what about a star or a triangle? Do bubbles from those shapes become round too? Trick 2 - Don't Pop the Bubble! You will need the super bubble solution, the lid from the container, a straw, and some objects with pointed ends.
What's Happening?
Science Words Molecule - a very tiny part of a substance that is too small to see with your eyes. A water molecule is smaller than one drop of water! Surface tension - molecules in a liquid are attracted to each other and make the top of the liquid very tight. The surface tension is what causes water to form drops. It also makes a dome shape across the top of a container that is filled to the top. Evaporate - when a liquid dries up and goes into the air. The liquid is then in the air, but it is a vapor or a gas now and you can't see it. When we say the air is humid, it means that a lot of water has evaporated into the air and now water vapor (gas) is floating around in the air. It makes the air moist and heavy, and it might make you feel sticky when you go outside. Fun Facts Right before a bubble pops, its soapy skin is only one-millionth of an inch thick! In 2005, someone blew a bubble so big that if it had been filled with water, it would have held 788 gallons (that is 788 milk jugs full) and it would have weighed more than 3 tons! In 1996, a man in New Zealand blew a bubble that was 105 feet long! He used a special bubble wand and a homemade bubble solution of soap, water, and glycerin. Silly Science What did the baby bubble call his father? (Answer: Poppa!) What did the big bubble say to the little bubble? (Answer: My pop is bigger than your pop!) Way Cool Websites Want to see a toy dinosaur enclosed in a bubble dome? Watch this video to see that and more bubble tricks! This video is of a bubble man named Casey Carle doing some amazing bubble tricks. It is in the dark, so the bubbles look very different than they do in daylight! Teacher Tidbits What Are Bubbles? Bubbles are pockets of soap and water that are filled with air. When soap and water are mixed together and air is blown into the mixture, the soap forms a thin skin or wall and traps the air, creating a bubble. Soap bubbles are not the only kind of bubbles. You can find bubbles in lots of liquids. You might see small bubbles in plain water, but they will always be in the water, or floating on the surface of the water, not floating through the air. There are bubbles in soda pop, too. The special thing about soap bubbles is that they can float freely in the air; they don't have to be touching water or another liquid like most bubbles do. Can you find other bubbles around your house? What about something that is round and filled with air like a bubble? (Some examples are balls, balloons, and bubble wrap.) How does soap help make bubbles out of water? Soap makes the surface tension of water weaker than normal. It also forms a very thin skin that is more flexible than water. When air gets trapped under the surface of the mixture of soap and water, the flexible skin stretches into a sphere shape (round like a ball), making a bubble! You can see the flexible skin that forms a bubble by dipping a bubble wand into some bubble solution. When you pull it out, the hole will be filled with a stretchable skin of liquid. If you blow gently on the skin, you'll blow a bubble! What Happens to Bubbles? Since bubbles are made from soap and water, they can only last as long as the water lasts. In dry air, water evaporates - it is soaked up by the dry air around the bubble and the skin of the bubble gets thinner and thinner until it finally pops! Evaporation isn't the only thing that pops bubbles. Anything dry can pop them. When a bubble floats through the air and lands on your finger, on a blade of dry grass, the wall of your house, or your pet's fur, the bubble will pop. When something sharp and dry touches the bubble, it pokes a hole in the bubble's skin, all the air goes out of it, and the bubble disappears! To learn how to touch a bubble without popping it, do Trick 2 in the Bubble Tricks experiment. Why Are Bubbles Round? Bubbles that float in the air and are not attached to anything are always round because the thin wall of soap is pulling in while the air inside of it is pushing out. A bubble always tries to take up the smallest amount of space and hold the most air that it possibly can. A sphere, the round ball-shape of a bubble, is the best way to take up a little space and hold a lot of air. Even when a bubble starts out as a square or another shape, like in Trick 1 from the Bubble Tricks experiment, it will always turn into a round sphere as soon as it floats away into the air. A square bubble would take up more space than a round one.
Bubble Worksheet For more bubble blowing fun, use this worksheet for ideas of common objects to try making bubbles with. Kids can also find other objects that work for making bubbles and draw them in the space provided. Science Question of the Month Question: "Why are there rainbows inside bubbles?" Answer: The pretty colors you see in bubbles are caused by light that is reflected off of the walls of the bubble. When light is reflected, here is what happens: light touches the outside of the bubble and bounces off of it, then it goes to your eye and you see color! As the surface of a bubble gets thinner, you will see different colors. When you first blow a bubble, you will probably see green and blue, then magenta or purple, and then just before the bubble pops, most of it will be a dark golden yellow color, or almost black. Sometimes the surface of the bubble is very thin on some parts, and thicker on other parts. When that happens, you will see lots of different colors on the bubble at once making it look like a rainbow! Next time you are outside blowing bubbles, see if you can tell when they are about to pop - remember, most of the bubble will probably be dark yellow or black just before it pops! |
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